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E8400 Vs E8500

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Has anyone done a comparison between the two?
I trying to decide wether to buy a 400 today or wait for a 500 :confused:
 
You can't discuss competitor pricing on here bud, even if you don't mention where!

Anyway, I decided that the extra cash for an 8500 over an 8400 wasn't worth it for the 0.5 multi and the 160mhz stock speed increase, so went for the 8400.

It will still hopefully overclock well, and end up where an 8500 would have been anyway.
 
:o sry edited ;)
I've put off putting together a new system until the new chips were out, and had planned on getting the E8500 (thinking the launch would go smoothly :rolleyes:) but now as they aren't about (I wanna order stuff today :D) looks like I'll have to go for E8400
 
depends how good the rest of your kit is really, if your mobo or ram aren't good enough to push the 8400 to it's limit, then the 8500 might be a better bet just to take the strain off your ram & mobo.
 
E8400 = Today, E8500 = Later

E8400 ~ 4Ghz; E8500 ~ 4.5Ghz

E8400 -> £60 -> E8500

Your choice

Why do you say the 8500 will do .5Ghz more than an 8400?

If an E8400 was at 4Ghz, then the FSB would be 444. (444x9=4000).

So, if an E8500 was also at 444FSB, then it would be running at 4.2Ghz, not 4.5Ghz. That's a difference of 200Mhz, not 500Mhz.

So, unless the E8500 allows a higher FSB?....

Or is the E8500 better silicon, or is this what people are actually achieving with the 2 chips?
 
Why do you say the 8500 will do .5Ghz more than an 8400?

If an E8400 was at 4Ghz, then the FSB would be 444. (444x9=4000).

So, if an E8500 was also at 444FSB, then it would be running at 4.2Ghz, not 4.5Ghz. That's a difference of 200Mhz, not 500Mhz.

So, unless the E8500 allows a higher FSB?....

Or is the E8500 better silicon, or is this what people are actually achieving with the 2 chips?

They say intel have been speed binning the chips
 
They say intel have been speed binning the chips

If that's the case, then that would be something!

It just seems a big step in price to the next chip. Mind you, that's always been the case I suppose. Q6600 to Q6700 for instance...
 
If you go and read dozens of threads on XS, you can see Intel seem to be keeping the better samples for the E8500's they all clock well and some of the E8400's not so well.
 
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